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Henry Lunt: biography and history of the development of Southern Utah and settling of Colonia Pacheco, Mexico

down. We took the cheese vat out and made the cheese house for a living room for mother and put the stove i the 'lean-to.' We had a room back of this we n called a saddle house and this, the boys slept in, but some of us went to the barn to sleep. Heaton claimed that they slept in the barn and the old 'saddle house' for eighteen months. He said, "mother was always able to n The cook us good meals i that little old lean-t~."'~ boys irnrnediately started on a new home. Broughton wote:
As Father and Aunt Ellen were getting along well in years, Mother [Sarah] wanted to build a big bnck house large enough to take care of them, her family, and she also wanted some spare rooms for passersby as there were a good many transient people in the country looking for accomrnodations. There was a need for a place where people could get a meal and a bed for the night and their horses fed and cared for. She went to Helaman Pratt for advice but he rather discouraged the idea, thiniung it too big a job for her and her boys with the means she had. It didn't daunt her, but only made her al1 the more determined that she would do it. We went to work and hired a man who knew how to make bnck, put up a bnck kiln, worked on the sawrnill for our lumber, and hired a boy, Mahony Breinholt, only 18 years old, whose father was on a mission in Denrnark, to lay the bnck. They al1 did a h e job.13
Patriarch Henry Lunt received a letter from Apostle George Teasdale from church headquarters ofthe L.D.S. Church in Salt Lake City, dated December 27, 1899, which foilows: My dear Brother: Your kind and esteemed favor of the 1Ith last

down. We took the cheese vat out and made the cheese house for a living room for mother and put the stove i the 'lean-to.' We had a room back of this we n called a saddle house and this, the boys slept in, but some of us went to the barn to sleep. Heaton claimed that they slept in the barn and the old 'saddle house' for eighteen months. He said, "mother was always able to n The cook us good meals i that little old lean-t~."'~ boys irnrnediately started on a new home. Broughton wote:
As Father and Aunt Ellen were getting along well in years, Mother [Sarah] wanted to build a big bnck house large enough to take care of them, her family, and she also wanted some spare rooms for passersby as there were a good many transient people in the country looking for accomrnodations. There was a need for a place where people could get a meal and a bed for the night and their horses fed and cared for. She went to Helaman Pratt for advice but he rather discouraged the idea, thiniung it too big a job for her and her boys with the means she had. It didn't daunt her, but only made her al1 the more determined that she would do it. We went to work and hired a man who knew how to make bnck, put up a bnck kiln, worked on the sawrnill for our lumber, and hired a boy, Mahony Breinholt, only 18 years old, whose father was on a mission in Denrnark, to lay the bnck. They al1 did a h e job.13
Patriarch Henry Lunt received a letter from Apostle George Teasdale from church headquarters ofthe L.D.S. Church in Salt Lake City, dated December 27, 1899, which foilows: My dear Brother: Your kind and esteemed favor of the 1Ith last